Printer Friendly
The Free Library
19,585,952 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

Booz Allen Hamilton Study Finds Forced Turnover of CEOs Has Reached a Record High; CEO Succession Increased Sharply in Europe and Asia.


Business Editors

NEW YORK--(BUSINESS WIRE)--May 12, 2003

CEOs appointed from outside are at greater risk of being fired

than insiders; Financial services The examples and perspective in this article or section may not represent a worldwide view of the subject.
Please [ improve this article] or discuss the issue on the talk page.
 industry has the lowest

CEO (1) (Chief Executive Officer) The highest individual in command of an organization. Typically the president of the company, the CEO reports to the Chairman of the Board.  turnover rate, telecommunications the highest

Companies are setting higher standards of performance for chief executive officers than ever before, and CEOs are falling short in record numbers, according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 the second annual survey of CEO turnover at the world's 2,500 largest publicly traded corporations released today by leading management and technology consulting firm Noun 1. consulting firm - a firm of experts providing professional advice to an organization for a fee
consulting company

business firm, firm, house - the members of a business organization that owns or operates one or more establishments; "he worked for a
 Booz Allen Hamilton Booz Allen Hamilton, Inc., referred to as Booz Allen is one of the oldest strategy consulting firms in the world.[1] The firm formerly had two consulting divisions: WCB (Worldwide Commercial Business, also known as “The Commercial Side”) and WTB .

And despite the high-profile management flameouts in the U.S., CEO turnover is accelerating faster in Asia and Europe than in North America North America, third largest continent (1990 est. pop. 365,000,000), c.9,400,000 sq mi (24,346,000 sq km), the northern of the two continents of the Western Hemisphere. , the study found.

The study comprehensively examines the linkages between CEO tenure and corporate performance, comparing CEO turnover in major regions and in specific industry sectors. Among the findings:

-- Involuntary involuntary adj. or adv. without intent, will, or choice. Participation in a crime is involuntary if forced by immediate threat to life or health of oneself or one's loved ones, and will result in dismissal or acquittal.


INVOLUNTARY.
 successions in 2002 increased by more than 70%

over 2001, even though the total number of CEO changes only

increased by 10%.

-- Of all CEO departures globally in 2002, 39% were forced,

performance-based changes, compared to 25% in 2001.

-- Regionally, the biggest change occurred in the Asia/Pacific

region, which accounted for nearly one of every five (19%)

global succession events, compared with 8% in 2001 and 6% in

2000. Forced turnover in Asia accounted for 45% of all

transitions there, up from only 6% in 2001.

-- North America accounted for 48% of all successions worldwide

in 2002, significantly lower than the 64% it accounted for in

2001.

-- In Europe, the rate of CEO changes has increased in each of

the five years the study examined since 1995. In 2002, 28% of

all CEO successions occurred in Europe.

-- CEOs grew a bit grayer last year. The mean age of chief

executives leaving office in 2002 was 58.1, up slightly from

2000 (56.8) and 2001 (57.1).

The firm's study, "CEO Succession 2002: Deliver or Depart," is being published in the Summer 2003 issue of strategy+business, Booz Allen's quarterly thought leadership journal, which goes on sale at newsstands June 1. It will also be available on www.strategy-business.com, s+b's Web site, as of May 13.

These results underscore The underscore character (_) is often used to make file, field and variable names more readable when blank spaces are not allowed. For example, NOVEL_1A.DOC, FIRST_NAME and Start_Routine.

(character) underscore - _, ASCII 95.
 the growing influence of shareholders and their representatives, corporate directors, the Booz Allen study concludes. Boards of directors are now exercising their power on behalf of shareholders with a vigor VIGOR Internal medicine A clinical study–Vioxx GI Outcomes Report comparing a proprietary COX-2 inhibitor to standard NSAIDs  unseen in modern times.

"Business leaders are enduring scrutiny and pressure unseen since the Great Depression," said Charles Lucier, senior vice president emeritus e·mer·i·tus  
adj.
Retired but retaining an honorary title corresponding to that held immediately before retirement: a professor emeritus.

n. pl.
 of Booz Allen Hamilton. "The CEO mystique mys·tique  
n.
An aura of heightened value, interest, or meaning surrounding something, arising from attitudes and beliefs that impute special power or mystery to it: the cowboy mystique; the mystique of existentialism.
 has all but evaporated evaporated

reduced in volume by evaporation; concentrated to a denser form.
, and director activism has replaced crony capitalism Crony capitalism is a pejorative term describing an allegedly capitalist economy in which success in business depends on close relationships between businessmen and government officials.  in the boardroom.

"This phenomenon is now fully global, even in regions not burdened by governance scandals," Lucier noted. CEOs are being replaced at a faster rate in Europe than the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. , and CEO turnover has skyrocketed in Asia, where chief executives of major corporations had been relatively protected from market forces.

"There is no longer any safe haven 1. Designated area(s) to which noncombatants of the United States Government's responsibility and commercial vehicles and materiel may be evacuated during a domestic or other valid emergency.
2.
 for chief executives who can't deliver superior results," Lucier concluded.

Key Study Findings

-- Boards are judging CEO underperformance more strictly. Chief

executives who were dismissed in 2002 generated median

regionally-adjusted shareholder returns 6.2 percentage points

lower than CEOs who retired voluntarily. It took an 11.9%

shortfall to prompt a firing in 2001; in 2000, fired CEOs

underperformed retiring chiefs by 13.5%.

-- CEO turnover in Europe and the Asia/Pacific region continues

to rise. CEO succession is up 192% in Europe and 140% in the

Asia/Pacific region since 1995, the study's benchmark year; in

North America, succession events increased only 2% during the

same period. In the Asia/Pacific region, which had been

relatively immune to forced succession, involuntary departures

accounted for nearly half of all turnovers last year.

-- Merger-driven transitions declined considerably in 2002.

Merger-related successions comprised 15% of all CEO turnover

globally, down from 27% the previous year and 29% in 2000, as

M&A activity declined generally.

-- CEOs appointed from outside the company are a high-stakes

gamble. Outsiders excel early, outperforming insiders by

nearly 7 percentage points in the first half of their tenures.

In the "second semester se·mes·ter  
n.
One of two divisions of 15 to 18 weeks each of an academic year.



[German, from Latin (cursus) s
," when most CEOs endure a slump,

outsiders underperform Underperform

An analyst recommendation that means a stock is expected to do slightly worse than the market return.

Also known as market underperform, moderate sell, or weak hold.
 insiders by 5.5 percentage points.

-- By failing to live up to their early promise, outsider CEOs

are at greater risk of being fired than insiders. In 2002,

more than half of all turnover of CEOs originally appointed

from outside the company were forced changes; for inside

appointments, only 44% of all changes were involuntary.

Industry-Specific Findings

-- Highest-Risk Industries: In 2002, the industries that saw the

highest rates of CEO turnover were utilities (15.8%),

telecommunications services In telecommunication, the term telecommunications service has the following meanings:

1. Any service provided by a telecommunication provider.

2.
 (15.6%), materials (13.5%), and

energy (12.6%). For the five years analyzed between 1995 and

2002, telecommunications had the highest turnover rate

(12.1%), followed by energy (11.3%), information technology

(9.7%), and healthcare (9.4%).

-- Forced Turnover: Telecommunications services had the highest

rate of forced turnover in 2002 (9.4%), followed by utilities

(5.7%), materials (5.2%), and information technology (4.7%).

For the period between 1995 and 2002, information technology

had the highest rate of CEO dismissals (4.3%), followed by

telecommunications services (4.2%), consumer discretionary

companies (3.1%), and healthcare (2.8%).

-- The Safest Industries: Financial services was the safest

industry for CEOs in this study - during the period between

1995 and 2002 the financial services industry had the least

turnover overall (6.6%) and the fewest forced departures

(1.5%). Other industries with relatively low turnover rates

during this period were industrials (8.5%), utilities, and

consumer discretionary (both 8.9%). In additional to financial

services, other industries with low forced turnover in this

period were energy (1.7%), materials (1.9%), and industrials

(2.0%).

Methodology

Booz Allen studied the 253 CEOs of the world's 2,500 publicly-traded corporations who left office in 2002, and evaluated both the performance of their companies and the events surrounding their departure. To provide historical context, Booz Allen evaluated and the compared this data to information on CEO departures for 1995, 1998, 2000 and 2001.

For purposes of the study, Booz Allen classified each CEO departure as either:

-- Merger-driven, in which a CEO's job was eliminated when the

CEO of the other company involved in the merger or acquisition

assumed control of the enterprise.

-- Performance-related, where the CEO was asked to leave by the

Board of Directors or there was significant speculation in the

business press that performance was the driver of the change,

or where the CEO cited job stress as the reason for his or her

resignation.

-- Regular transition, in which the CEO retired on a long-planned

schedule, died in office or left to become the CEO of another

company.

About Booz Allen Hamilton

Booz Allen Hamilton has been at the forefront of management consulting Noun 1. management consulting - a service industry that provides advice to those in charge of running a business
service industry - an industry that provides services rather than tangible objects
 for businesses and governments for more than 80 years. Booz Allen combines strategy with technology and insight with action, working with clients to deliver results today that endure tomorrow. With 12,000 employees on six continents Six Continents is a large retail PLC in UK which split into Six Continents Retail known as Mitchells and Butlers plc. The hotels and soft drinks business of Six Continents PLC is now known as InterContinental Hotels Group PLC. , the firm generates annual sales of $2.2 billion. Booz Allen provides services in strategy, organization, operations, systems, and technology to the world's leading corporations, government and other public agencies, emerging growth companies, and institutions.

To learn more about the firm, visit the Booz Allen Web site at www.boozallen.com. To learn more about the best ideas in business, visit www.strategy-business.com, the Web site for strategy+business, a quarterly journal sponsored by Booz Allen.
COPYRIGHT 2003 Business Wire
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2003, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Publication:Business Wire
Geographic Code:90ASI
Date:May 12, 2003
Words:1247
Previous Article:Chronimed Renews Specialty Pharmacy Services Relationship with Aetna.
Next Article:JBoss Announces Marketing Agreement with JetBrains; Most Downloaded Java-Based Open Source Application Server Teams With Leading Java IDE to Maximize...



Related Articles
THE REST of the Gang.
Global CEO turnover at record highs. (Leadership).
The right stuff: insurance chief executives need energy, financial knowledge and devotion to details, but not necessarily an insurance background.
Building better health plans: spending more time on research before launching a new health plan can lead to greater innovation and reduce expensive...
Electronic evolution: electronic records are on the way, and payors need to watch the process closely.
How much does R & D matter?
Flower shop: Harlem-based florist offers secrets for combining creative designs and distinct flowers.
strategy + business.
Talent search: insurers must develop a talent management strategy to protect their most important investment--the quality of people they attract and...

Terms of use | Copyright © 2012 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles